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Date Range. To view reviews within a date range, please click and drag a selection on a graph above or click on a specific bar. Again back to reality, the Cube tells Rattmann to run away while he is outside, but feeling he is responsible for the whole mess, he prefers to get back inside, and save her.
Part 2 opens with Doug Rattmann traversing the innards of the facility. The Companion Cube informs him that the anti-psychotic he took in Part 1 is starting to work, as the Cube slowly fades to silence. He decides to try to save her by getting to Cryo-Control, but the Sentry Turrets block his way. Finding a panel in the wall, he quickly realizes that GLaDOS' destruction blew the main power grid and that all the Cryo-Chambers have gone offline as a result, including Chell's.
Doug then attempts to run past the Turrets but is struck down. Rattmann, apparently the only survivor, is taunted by GLaDOS about his schizophrenia as he escapes from the main testing facility. While GLaDOS continues to taunt and manipulate him, Rattmann manages to reach the file room where he finds Chell's file, declaring that she's "the one", then puts her on top of the Test Subject list. Back to reality, Rattmann is lying on the floor, wounded by the Turrets, reaches out to his Companion Cube but loses consciousness.
She says that added to the boxes and the cats, she needs a little neurotoxin. Henry, unaware of her malicious intentions, accepts, "as long as it's for science", thus sealing the employees' fate. Doug regains consciousness, and his schizophrenia has returned. The Cube can talk again and asks about Chell being "the one" and how Doug knew she is, to which he admits it was just a hunch.
The Cube then tells Doug to patch Chell's Cryo-Unit in the reserve grid to restart her life support, which works but keeps Chell in an everlasting sleep until she is woken up, "both alive and dead until someone opens the box".
Exhausted, Rattmann crawls into the bed of a Relaxation Vault and presumably falls asleep. It was later revealed by Valve that Rattmann was long dead before the events of Portal 2 [citation needed]. On the floor, Chell's files scatter on the ground, showing that she should not be tested, as she is "abnormally stubborn and never ever gives up. Following the events of Portal 2: Lab Rat , Chell is awoken 50 days later in her relaxation chamber, which has the appearance of a motel room, for a 'mandatory physical and mental wellness exercise'.
After a brief 'exercise', Chell returns to her sleep. Her room is in a state of disrepair, and soon, an unfamiliar voice greets her. Upon opening the door she finds herself face to face with a more modern-looking Personality Core whose name is later revealed to be Wheatley , the jovial AI in charge of the test subjects storage facility. After warning Chell of the likelihood of her having serious brain damage, Wheatley moves her relaxation chamber through the storage facility, crashing several times and largely destroying the room in the process, all the while ranting about the huge responsibility of taking care of the test subjects.
After successfully navigating the room to the main testing facility, Wheatley instructs Chell to go retrieve a " gun that makes holes ," as it will be needed for their escape from the facility. Upon successfully acquiring the device, Wheatley and Chell make their way to GLaDOS' chamber where Wheatley claims an escape pod to the surface is located.
They find the chamber partially destroyed, with overgrown wildlife everywhere, and in the middle of the chamber lies the lifeless body of GLaDOS. After reaching the breaker room under the chamber, Wheatley attempts to find the breaker for the lift. Bitter at the cause of her death, she crushes Wheatley and tosses him away before dropping Chell into the Emergency Intelligence Incinerator , into the incinerator room. Fixing the broken down facility while Chell is once again put through testing, GLaDOS, bitter at her murder, informs Chell that her black box forced her to relive her own murder again and again forever.
He asks Chell to play along with the testing until he figures out a way for them to escape. GLaDOS' taunts become more vindictive, at one point pretending to reunite the 'orphan' Chell with her family. While in a test chamber, the power is cut out and Wheatley reveals himself from behind a wall panel, under the false impression GLaDOS cannot detect him.
When she does, he and Chell make a run for it through the inner facility with GLaDOS attempting to halt their progress. Along the way, they pass a 'potato power' exhibition, held on the ill-fated 'Bring Your Daughter to Work Day. While making their way through the Turret production facility, Wheatley reveals he plans to sabotage the Turrets and neurotoxin supply so that when they face GLaDOS she will be unarmed.
Wherein "destroying" GlaDOS was just part of the test. You never actually left the test at any time. This cake gift was confirmed by the return to the menu shot of your cubicle with the cake now on your desk. And, indeed, the whole "hidden rooms covered in scrawl" was just another part of the simulation. I admit, your version matches the song better. Although she could be saying "I'm glad I'm not driven by your silly desire to escape which you never did". Also it seems odd to assume the final scene with the cake was from somebody else's POV, because everything else in the entire game is from Chell's POV.
Pls no spoilers for Portal 2, spoilers for P Yeah, in some ways the addition of the robot dragging you back muddles the question of what the song and cake scene mean. Originally they were more clearly a change of perspective. I mean, the song plays over the credits, it's already taken you out of the Chell viewpoint you inhabit during gameplay.
The scene with the personality spheres and the menu shot with the cake on your desk is just an amusing coda. With the robot dragging you back, though, that gets a little confused. Register Don't have an account? View source. History Talk Do you like this video?
Play Sound. Main article: Portal storyline. Main article: Portal ARG. Main article: Portal 2. Main article: Portal soundtrack. Portal: Final Hands-on. Retrieved on 5 October Portal: First Impressions. Narbacular Drop official site 17 July Retrieved on 21 JUly Game Informer. Retrieved on 27 September Game Rankings.
Retrieved on 31 December Retrieved on June Portal Preview.
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